Joint Seminar on Quantum Information and Technologies
2012/2013 | 2013/2014 | 2014/2015 | 2015/2016 | 2016/2017 | 2017/2018 | 2018/2019 | 2019/2020 | 2020/2021 | 2021/2022 | 2022/2023 | 2023/2024 | 2024/2025 | YouTube channel
until 2023/2024 Quantum Information Seminar | YouTube channel
2016-04-07 (Thursday)
Adam Bednorz (IFT UW)
Local realism - case closed?
2016-03-31 (Thursday)
Seminarium odwołane (z uwagi na Warsztaty "Spectral & Spatial Engineering of Quantum Light ")
2016-03-17 (Thursday)
Bartosz Regula (University of Nottingham)
Entanglement quantification made easy: Polynomial measures invariant under convex decomposition
Quantifying entanglement in composite systems is a fundamental challenge, yet exact results are available in only a few special cases. This is because hard optimisation problems are routinely involved, such as finding the convex decomposition of a mixed state with the minimal average pure-state entanglement -- the so-called convex roof. We show that under certain conditions such a problem becomes trivial. Precisely, we prove by a geometric argument that polynomial entanglement measures of degree 2 are independent of the choice of pure-state decomposition of a mixed state, when the latter has only one pure unentangled state in its range. This allows for the analytical evaluation of convex roof extended entanglement measures in classes of rank-2 states obeying such a condition. We give explicit examples for the square root of the three-tangle in three-qubit states, and we show that several representative classes of four-qubit pure states have marginals that enjoy this property. Additionally, we show the importance of states obeying this property by demonstrating their use in characterising generalised monogamy relations of four-qubit states.
2016-03-10 (Thursday)
Michał Dąbrowski (IFD UW)
N-photon generator based on Raman quantum memory
2016-03-02 (Wednesday)
Seminarium odwołane (z uwagi na Warsztaty "Recent Advances in Quantum Metrology")
2016-02-25 (Thursday)
Seminarium odwołane (z uwagi na Warsztaty "Quantum Limits of Optical Communication")
2016-01-21 (Thursday)
Jelmer Renema (University of Oxford)
The physics of nanowire superconducting single photon detectors
In this talk, I will discuss our recent results on the working mechanism of nanowire superconducting single photon detectors (SSPDs). I will present experimental results on energy-current relation, position dependence of the detection efficiency, hotspot size and timing jitter. I will present numerical modeling of the detection mechanism using a combination of quasiparticle diffusion, current continuity and vortex entry. Together, these results sketch out a basic framework for a complete theory of the SSPD detection mechanism, and provide us with the opportunity of computing basic SSPD properties ab initio.
2016-01-14 (Thursday)
Krzysztof Pawłowski (CFT PAN)
Storage of entanglement by classial fixed points
2016-01-07 (Thursday)
Wojciech Rządkowski (IFT UW)
Continuous limit of discrete quantum phase estimation
2015-12-17 (Thursday)
Aleksander Kubica (California Institute of Technology)